ethereal3xp

ethereal3xp OP t1_jc6t23t wrote

Maybe it's the older recipe/method to frying

I was a big fan of the old KFC chicken recipe and soggy fries/mixed vegetable slaw

These days the chicken taste like it's overfried. Can't hardly taste the pepper and other spices. Fries is hard as chopsticks. Just overall it has gone downhill

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ethereal3xp OP t1_jbtjhcx wrote

>Plastic pollution in oceans has reached 'unprecedented' levels in 15 years

Plastic pollution in the world's oceans has reached "unprecedented levels" over the past 15 years, a new study has found, calling for a legally binding international treaty to stop the harmful waste.

OceanĀ plastic pollution is a persistent problem around the globe -- animals may become entangled in larger pieces of plastic like fishing nets, or ingest microplastics that eventually enter the food chain to be consumed by humans.Ā 

Research published on Wednesday found that there are an estimated 170 trillion pieces of plastic, mainly microplastics, on the surface of the world's oceans today, much of it discarded since 2005.Ā 

"PlasticĀ pollutionĀ in the world's oceans during the past 15 years has reached unprecedented levels," said the study, published in open-access journal PLOS One.

Researchers took plastic samples from over 11,000 stations around the world focusing on a 40-year period between 1979 and 2019.Ā 

They found no trends until 1990, then a fluctuation in trends between 1990 and 2005. After that, the samples skyrocket.Ā 

"We see a really rapid increase since 2005 because there is a rapid increase in production and also a limited number of policies that are controlling the release of plastic into the ocean," contributing author Lisa Erdle told AFP.Ā 

The sources of plastic pollution in the ocean are numerous.Ā Fishing gear like nets and buoys often end up in the middle of the ocean, dumped or dropped by accident, while things like clothing, car tyres and single-use plastics often pollute nearer to the coast.

They eventually break down into microplastics, which Erdle said can look like "confetti on the surface of the ocean".

>'Flood of toxic products'

On current trends, plastic use will nearly double from 2019 across G20 countries by 2050, reaching 451 million tonnes each year, according to the report, jointly produced by Economist Impact and The Nippon Foundation.Ā 

In 1950, only two million tonnes of plastic were produced worldwide.Ā 

Recycling, even in countries with advanced waste management systems, has done little to help the pollution problem since just a small percentage of plastics are properly recycled and much often ending up in landfills instead.Ā If landfills are not properly managed, plastic waste can leech into the environment, eventually making its way to oceans.Ā 

"We really we see a lack of recycling, a flood of toxic products and packaging," Erdle said.Ā 

The rates of plastic waste were seen to recede at some points between 1990 and 2005, in part because there were some effective policies in place to control pollution.Ā That includes the 1988 MARPOL treaty, a legally binding agreement among 154 countries to end the discharge of plastics from naval, fishing and shipping fleets.Ā 

But with so much more plastic being produced today, the study's authors said a new, wide-ranging treaty is needed to not only reduce plastic production and use but also better manage its disposal.Ā 

"Environmental recovery of plastic has limited merit, so solution strategies must address those systems that restrict emissions of plastic pollution in the first place," the study said.Ā 

Last year, 175 nations agreed to end plastic pollution under a legally binding United Nations agreement that could be finalised as soon as next year.Ā 

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ethereal3xp OP t1_jacre6s wrote

>Switzerland, a small mountainous nation in western Europe, has avoided rampant inflation even as other countries continue to battle sky-high prices.

>Inflation in Switzerland hit a 29-year high of 3.5% in 2022, well below the double-digit rates of other advanced economies.

>A strong Swiss franc, resilient energy supply and pricing controls are some of the factors that have helped shelter the country's economy

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ethereal3xp OP t1_j8tn6g5 wrote

Because he doesnt trust anybody else other than himself

General AI in theory would mean a easier/comfortable life for humans

But humans may end up becoming dumber. And in addition if the AI inventor was some kind of environmentalist.... he could set the AI to action based on "saving the planet"

Meaning shut off power, gas, factories (when not needed) etc.... even if it could mean some human suffering.

And a human couldnt override

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ethereal3xp OP t1_j8t2rub wrote

Ok but what?

Even self driving cars (automated).... is task based if you think about it

Its focus is to drive a car. And it wont be able to drive as well as a human....if factoring in traffic or accident situation.

General AI or strong AI as some of labelled it.... is almost like a human brain.

It can deep learn, make advance calculations and make this conscious decision without human approval. Its long ways away....

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